Wife is (Extra)Ordinary

I found the idea that history and literature could experience a sort of role-reversal when reading the chapter on New Historicism.  Stating that the historical event became a social text while the literary text serves as the social event was a little confusing at first, but then started to make sense once we discussed what this means in class.  Professor Seaman stated that our reading suggests that even as an event happens, it doesn’t occur in a historical sense but in a literary one.  Looking at a work of literature from this standpoint, then, one can gather a sense of the event or people it depicts rather than of the historical facts themselves.

In regards to Chaucer, it was really intriguing to see Patterson’s perspective on his intentions and his depiction of the Wife herself.  The idea that she represents an ideal of the time seems to insinuate that he was simply reproducing the conventions of his time period in that people accepted this stereotype.  Thinking of Chaucer as consciously attempting to write in the form of literary representation true to the tradition makes me wonder what else he may have meant by his description of his characters.  Making the Wife’s story center on marriage because that is how she is represented as a subject of literary attention also seems interesting.  If she had been presented as an artisan, her story would have had a different significance at the time and would have elevated her skill level for the readers.  However, the fact that she is defined by her social position makes her seem more ordinary, and in doing so she becomes important historically as signifying a simple character of the time period.  In my opinion, Chaucer seemed to acknowledge that in preserving this cultural norm of his time he could create an ideal true to his era while at the same time keeping her in the social constrictions that would have been in place.  The benefit of this today is that we get a sense of the role of women—even though she is unusually happy and content with her life through her good (and bad) marriages—that would have been ordinary at the time yet are culturally telling for a retrospective standpoint.

Historicism

So a critical moment in class for me was discussing the fact that Patterson does not read Chaucer from the aspect of literary Historicism, but rather to consider the role of the Wife of Bath as a unique individual within the framework of her societal position of a business woman and the complex relationships with her past husbands. The significance of this view for me was that I realized how important it is to understand the various ways of interpreting texts, even if some of them happen to be different than how would usually choose to interpret the text. In this scenario, since we understand how to Historically-analyze the Wife of Bath, it enabled us to explore another avenue to reveal that Chaucer may not have been taking a Historicist view, but rather highlighting qualities concerning the wife of bath that may her an exception to the norm of the day. In other words, we know can view her story as an unrealistic story of her time, and appreciate her unique qualities in comparison to the conventional hardships of the 18th century woman. When I consider Patterson’s argument, I can understand easily why Chaucer was considered a “modern man,” in that he may have been anticipated changes in freedom for women, or at the very least, elaborating upon her professional life which was unusual for a woman at that time.

In considering Patterson’s argument for a non-Historicist reading of the Wife of Bath, I can clearly understand why we should have a thorough understanding of various ways of reading texts. Not only can we use those types of readings to interpet a text, bu we can also use them to narrow down the ways we could be more aptly applying literary techniques, and discover rewarding paths of exploration that can only be fueled by first ruling out other ways of reading the text.  What a valuable tool!